Weekend Herald

Pro-independen­ce parties deal blow to Rajoy

Catalan secessioni­sts set to have majority in Parliament after record turnout at polls

- William Booth and Pamela Rolfe

The three pro-independen­ce parties in Catalonia have won a majority of seats in a parliament­ary election in the restive region, setting the stage for another fraught showdown with the central Government in Madrid.

With a record-breaking turnout of more than 80 per cent, Catalans dealt Spain’s Prime Minister, Mariano Rajoy, a major setback as the secessioni­st leaders stood poised to return to power in Barcelona, among them former regional President Carles Puigdemont, now in exile in Brussels.

“Rajoy and his allies have been defeated,” Puigdemont said. “They received a big slap-down.”

Voters packed polling stations to pick a new legislatur­e and to answer an old and bitterly divisive question: Did they back leaders who want to remain a part of Spain or seek independen­ce?

With 99 per cent of the ballots counted, the three pro-independen­ce parties had taken 48 per cent of the vote, while the unionist parties and a few smaller parties had garnered 52 per cent.

But the pro-independen­ce parties were set to claim 70 seats in the regional Parliament with those numbers, giving them a majority in the 135-seat chamber. The unionists and other parties would likely take 65 seats.

The secessioni­sts won that many seats thanks to an electoral-collegesty­le system that gives added weight to votes cast in less populated areas — the traditiona­l stronghold­s of Catalan nationalis­t identity. The system is intended to balance out the populated urban areas with rural communitie­s, thus affording parliament­ary representa­tion to regional groups even though they might lack a popular majority.

The pro-unity Citizens Party was poised to come in first in terms of votes but is expected to be unable to form a government.

“The law is unfair that gives a majority to the Parliament that they don’t have on the streets,” said Citizens party leader Ines Arrimadas.

Still, she was ebullient, saying that her party’s victory was made possible by more than a million “brave people” who rejected separation from Spain. “For the first time ever, a constituti­onalist party won the election in Catalonia,” Arrimadas said.

The pro-independen­t bloc’s majority means it will most likely form the new government after negotiatio­ns.

Marta Rovira, the leader of the proindepen­dence Catalan Republican Left, said the secessioni­st bloc’s showing demonstrat­ed that “the citizens of Catalonia, the majority, voted for the republic”. She asked the Prime Minister: “Mr Mariano Rajoy, are you going to sit at a table as we always asked you and begin to negotiate? Are you going to abolish the 155?” Article 155 of the 1978 Spanish constituti­on was the tool Rajoy deployed, for the first time ever, to dissolve the rebellious regional legislatur­e, take over the Catalan Government and call snap elections.

Puigdemont warned: “Europe has to take note. Rajoy’s remedies are not working. If he doesn’t change, we are going to change the country faster than even we thought possible.”

Voting proceeded calmly across

the region, unlike the chaotic independen­ce referendum that was held in October despite being declared illegal by the country’s constituti­onal court. There were no reports of significan­t irregulari­ties. Turnout was confirmed at a record 81 per cent.

The election came less than two months after two million Catalans chose to secede from Spain and their leaders unilateral­ly declared independen­ce, prompting the drastic moves by Rajoy.

The Prime Minister’s hope was for a legal and orderly vote in which the region’s secessioni­sts would be swept aside. He failed. His Popular Party also lost seven seats in the election.

Miquel Iceta, the Catalan Socialists’ candidate, celebrated the huge turnout. “The greater the participat­ion, the more the joy for all democrats,” he said.

At one polling place in an upscale neighbourh­ood in Barcelona, voters on both sides of the independen­ce issue said that they felt more fatigue than excitement. Many said they were disturbed by the deep rift that has emerged in Catalan society.

“It feels like Catalonia is totally broken,” said Ines Corrales, 19, a student who had plastered a Spanish flag sticker on her motorbike helmet. She said she voted for the Cuidadanos, or Citizens, party, which opposes independen­ce.

Corrales said that even her childhood friends had ribbed her for not supporting the separatist­s, calling her a fascist.

“I was never for independen­ce, though I love Catalonia,” said Javier Sedo, 81, a pensioner. “I believe the power of Spain is the union of its many nations.” Sedo, who joked that he wished his country were more like the United States of Spain, said he had voted for the socialists.

A father and son, Ramiro and Guillermo Salina, aged 59 and 21, came out to vote together. They supported two different proindepen­dence parties.

“I want to see a negotiatio­n toward independen­ce,” the father said. His son volunteere­d, “I just want independen­ce.”

Did they think they would see a sovereign Catalonia?

They didn’t, not anytime soon. “I think we will have to vote on this issue again and maybe again,” Ramiro Salina said.

It was not only the Spanish Government that sought to stop the secessioni­sts. Most of Spain and its powerful business groups oppose an independen­t Catalonia. European leaders, too, have made clear they would not recognise an independen­t Catalonia and want the matter settled and the situation returned to “constituti­onal normalcy”, as Rajoy put it.

Yet there was little normal about this election.

Puigdemont fled into self-exile in Belgium in late October. Spanish prosecutor­s dropped their request for his extraditio­n, but the separatist leader still faces arrest on charges of rebellion if he returns to Spain.

Spanish news media reported that the national police were keeping a close eye on the border with France to see whether Puigdemont attempts to return.

Meanwhile, former Vice-President Oriol Junqueras sits behind bars in the national prison outside Madrid, as prosecutor­s decide whether to charge him with sedition, which carries a maximum sentence of 30 years. His party, the Catalan Republican Left, came in third yesterday.

The ousted secessioni­st and former President Puigdemont said, “The prisoners have to be freed, and Mr Rajoy needs to start to make a political process to find a solution.”

 ?? Picture / AP ?? Carles Puigdemont was the focus of attention as he arrived for a press conference in Brussels after the result was announced yesterday.
Picture / AP Carles Puigdemont was the focus of attention as he arrived for a press conference in Brussels after the result was announced yesterday.

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